Bitcoin

Bitcoin (BTC) dipped below $29,000 on Aug. 3 as market concerns over largest global exchange Binance reignited BTC price downside.

BTC/USD 1-hour chart. Source: TradingView

BTC price analysis “expects” support retest

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed BTC price action heading lower before a modest comeback into the Wall Street open.

Rumors over new United States legal action against Binance made for a disappointing 24 hours for Bitcoin bulls after a brief trip above $30,000.

With the trading range still firmly in place, monitoring resource Material Indicators forecast a further bearish support retest to come.

“If you’re surprised, confused or think the bi-directional volatility is over then you haven’t been paying attention,” part of prior analysis read.

Popular trader Daan Crypto Trades meanwhile suggested that current BTC price behavior was merely the continuation of an all-too-familiar pattern.

“I’ve said it before but I’ll say it again… The longer price hovers around here, the bigger the move following it, will be,” he added on the day.

Others made light of the Binance narrative. Ki Young Ju, CEO of analytics platform CryptoQuant, argued that panic over solvency issues would turn out to be a non-event.

“I’ve heard about the ‘bank run/insolvency risk on Binance’ a hundred times for years, but their user balances always tell a different story,” he tweeted alongside charts showing the exchange’s BTC and Ether (ETH) reserves.

Binance BTC, ETH reserves charts. Source: Ki Young Ju/Twitter

Bitcoin volatility prepares to undercut stocks, gold

Overall, however, Bitcoin volatility remains at historically-low levels.

Related: Bitcoin price risks $25K dip despite ‘macro pivot point’ — New analysis

According to the Bitcoin Historical Volatility Index (BVOL), weekly volatility was headed toward record lows seen at the start of 2023.

Bitcoin Historical Volatility Index (BVOL) 1-week chart. Source: TradingView

This chimes with existing comparisons to January, with Bollinger Bands data likewise echoing the period immediately prior to Bitcoin’s Q1 breakout.

Dylan LeClair, senior analyst at digital asset fund UTXO Management, additionally noted that 10-day realized volatility was almost below that of U.S. stocks, bonds and gold.

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

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